“It was hard,” Stoops said in an interview with The Oklahoman before Thursday night's OU Caravan to Dallas.

As the Oklahoma football team listens, head football coach Bob Stoops explains how important Austin Box was to the success of the Oklahoma Sooners and to the community of Enid, Okla., Friday, May 27, 2011, during a "Celebration of Life" at Emmanuel Baptist Church. Box, a three-year letterman in football for the Sooners, passed away May 19 in Oklahoma City. (AP Photo/Enid News and Eagle, Bonnie Vculek) ORG XMIT: OKENI102

“It's something you don't ever want to do.”

It's been two weeks since Box died after being found unresponsive at a friend's home.

Two agonizing weeks for Oklahoma's football coach.

“There's no way to describe it,” Stoops said. “I don't even want to try and do it. Words don't do it justice. It's been very tough.”

Box had just received his college degree the weekend before he died and would have been OU's starting middle linebacker this season.

The day of Box's funeral, tragedy struck the Sooner football community again when former All-American safety Brandon Everage drowned in a river at the age of 30.

“We are with these guys everyday,” Stoops said. “And so much (people say) ‘It's just winning, just money, just them getting their benefits.' But it's not.

“We interact with these kids everyday. And it hurts. We are very much emotionally attached to them, and they are to us.”

Because of that, Stoops feels even more for defensive coordinator Brent Venables, who not only was Box's position coach, but has had to deal with the unexpected death of his brother, as well.

“I remember when I was a position coach, my guys are my guys. You're attached to your position guys,” Stoops said. “He is as attached to all the defensive guys, to all the players as I am, but when it's your position, you're in the meeting room every single day with them, it's even more emotional and closer and tighter and it makes it more difficult.